

Use the Workshop iamge to show off what your mod is all about.On a stump, that way you can still be in the forest, but the background is a different color from the main character. Instead what that person should do is focus on something like the druid sitting This means the character will more or less blend in and our eyes may not even notice the character let alone focus on it. Well the druid is already heavily green, and so is tropical the forest.

If the picture doesn't have a focal point, peoples eyes won't know what to look at and will just end up not looking at all.Ī bad example of this is assume someone made a druid type character, for their thumbnail they put them in a dense tropical forest. Avoid using high contrasting backgrounds.A character mod for example may make a blown up version of their character portrait for the thumbnail. Use the thumbnail image to highlight or show off the main part of your mod.If you have never made images like this before, here are some general suggestions. It is a 16:9 Ratio Image, I would suggest at least 1920 x 1080. The Workshop image is what you get when click into the actual mod page. The Thumbnail Image (which is what you see when scrolling past) is a 268x268 image however, you can just make a 512x512 and let the workshop crop it. So we have no reason to put them into the mods folder.

The images used by the workshop are in no way used by the mod. Important: Images created for the workshop DO NOT need to be put into the Mod folder Uploading a mod isn't terribly difficult but, there is a few steps you need to do before uploading.
